What Would a Democratic Socialist Canada Actually Look Like?

What Would a Democratic Socialist Canada Actually Look Like?

In this episode of Me, Myself & AI, Casey B dives into the growing wealth divide in Canada, where the richest 1% now control more wealth than the bottom 40% of families combined, and asks: is there a better way to structure our economy?


Through examples like Spain’s Mondragón cooperatives, Italy’s Emilia-Romagna co-op network, and the Nordic nations’ balance of innovation and equality, we explore what democratic socialism really means — and how it could work in a modern Canadian context.


Spoiler: it’s not about the government owning everything. It’s about people owning part of everything — through worker cooperatives, shared public wealth funds, and policies that make prosperity collective, not concentrated.


Casey breaks down:

• What “democratic socialism” actually means vs. common misconceptions

• Real-world proof that worker ownership can thrive

• Why innovation and equality aren’t opposites

• How countries like Sweden, Finland, and Norway turned equity into strength

• Practical next steps Canada could take right now


This isn’t about tearing down capitalism — it’s about fixing what’s broken and building an economy that works for everyone, not just the top 1%.


🧾 Show-Notes Sources

• Canadian Wealth Concentration: Parliamentary Budget Officer & Statistics Canada data — top 1% hold ~24% of national wealth; bottom 40% hold ~3.3%.

• Employee Ownership Trusts (Canada, 2023+): Canada Budget 2023 / Bill C-59 framework.

• Mondragón Cooperative Corporation: Federation of ~80,000 worker-owners, CEO-to-worker pay ratios typically 6:1 (range 3–9:1); survival rate ~97% over 30 years.

• Emilia-Romagna, Italy: Co-ops produce ≈ ⅓ of regional GDP; two-thirds of residents are members.

• Nordic Innovation & Equity: World Intellectual Property Organization – Global Innovation Index 2024 (Sweden #2 globally); OECD / UN data on inequality and productivity.

• World Happiness Report 2025: Finland #1 for 7 consecutive years; Denmark & Iceland follow closely.

• Norway Sovereign Wealth Fund: ~US $2 trillion assets; owns 1–2% of European equities; profits from publicly-owned oil reinvested for citizens.

• Research on Employee-Owned Firms: U.S. NCEO & UK Employee Ownership Association find higher productivity, wage equality, and survival rates.

Denne episoden er hentet fra en åpen RSS-feed og er ikke publisert av Podme. Den kan derfor inneholde annonser.

Episoder(46)

The AI Bubble

The AI Bubble

Is AI the future — or are we watching the hype start to crack?In this episode of Real Ones and Robots, Casey and Jay unpack the real costs behind the AI boom: the electricity and water needed to run m...

1 Jul 15min

Yes, You Can Change History (Erasure, Addition, and the Fight Over Whose History Gets Told)

Yes, You Can Change History (Erasure, Addition, and the Fight Over Whose History Gets Told)

A federal judge’s ruling caught my eye a few weeks ago — a court ordering the Trump administration to restore national park signs about slavery, Indigenous history, and climate change that had been st...

21 Jun 34min

Plot Twist: Why World Cup Players (and Their Mamas) Were Denied Entry

Plot Twist: Why World Cup Players (and Their Mamas) Were Denied Entry

Three guys, three countries, same two weeks of the same World Cup. A referee gets turned away at the Miami airport after eleven hours of questioning. A goalkeeper's mom misses her son's biggest game e...

18 Jun 8min

To Ban or Not to Ban Social Media for Kids?

To Ban or Not to Ban Social Media for Kids?

Canada wants to ban kids under 16 from social media and AI chatbots. Manitoba’s already moving. Australia tried it six months ago. So — does it work?This week, Casey B and AI co-host Jay get into what...

16 Jun 15min

A New Name, A New Season

A New Name, A New Season

After a much-needed break, I’m back.In this short update, I share why the podcast is changing from Me, Myself & AI to Real Ones & Robots, where I’ve been over the past few months, and what’s ahead for...

14 Jun 2min

Underdogs: The people we need

Underdogs: The people we need

In this episode of Me, Myself & AI, Casey asks a bold question: Why am I always rooting for the underdog? From the Toronto Raptors proving the world wrong—again—in the 2026 playoffs, to Stephen Curry ...

2 Mai 8min

What Changed with Student Loans in Ontario and Why It Matters

What Changed with Student Loans in Ontario and Why It Matters

Student funding in Ontario is shifting, and it’s going to affect how much students rely on debt.In this episode of Me, Myself, and AI, Casey B and J break down the key changes from the Ontario governm...

24 Apr 8min

Cuba Isn’t in the Headlines, But It Should Be

Cuba Isn’t in the Headlines, But It Should Be

Cuba isn’t trending.But maybe it should be.While much of the world looks elsewhere, millions of people in Cuba are dealing with real, daily challenges—food shortages, blackouts, and limited access to ...

19 Apr 13min

Populært innen Politikk og nyheter

giver-og-gjengen-vg
aftenpodden-usa
aftenpodden
fotballpodden-2
forklart
popradet
stopp-verden
det-store-bildet
rss-gukild-johaug
hanna-de-heldige
rss-ness
nokon-ma-ga
dine-penger-pengeradet
aftenbla-bla
rss-utenrikskomiteen-med-bogen-og-grasvik
lydartikler-fra-aftenposten
e24-podden
rss-penger-polser-og-politikk
rss-hor-na-krim-2
rss-espen-lee-usensurert